“Hot news” is a label that means nothing. It’s just marketing.
A story can be “hot” because it’s sensational, not because it’s important. A murder is hot. A celebrity scandal is hot. A political fight is hot.
But importance is different. A policy change that affects farmers is important, but it’s rarely “hot.” A new law on education is important, but it doesn’t get the same buzz.
So when you see “hot news in india today,” pause. Ask: is this hot or important? If it’s just hot, you can skip it. Your attention is too valuable for just hot.
I’ve trained myself to ignore the “trending” sections. Instead, I look for stories with headlines like “Explained,” “Analysis,” or “In depth.” Those are the ones that actually teach me something.
If a story is truly important, it will be covered by serious outlets, not just “hot news” aggregators.
So next time you see that label, take a breath. Don’t click. Go find something that matters.